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Conference smurf::civil_war

Title:The American Civil War
Notice:Please read all replies 1.* before writing here.
Moderator:SMURF::BINDER
Created:Mon Jul 15 1991
Last Modified:Tue Apr 08 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:141
Total number of notes:2129

31.0. "Ironclads" by GVRIEL::SCHOELLER (Schoeller - Failed Xperiment) Mon Aug 26 1991 13:43

I have been led into some interest in the ironclads, especially the Monitor.
Does anyone have any recommendations on books to look into on them and on the
conditions for the crews aboard?

Dick
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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31.1SMURF::CALIPH::binderSine tituloMon Aug 26 1991 14:278
No book recommendations, but conditions weren't all that much different
from conditions aboard a wooden warship -- until cannonballs began
bouncing off the turrets, at which time rivets would pop loose and go
ricocheting around inside.  Also, the clanging from shell and ball
impacts on the iron was deafening far and above what came from their
own guns, and the latter was hellish.

-d
31.2Ironclads are intresting..PSDVAX::DFIELDTue Aug 27 1991 01:4025
    
    
    	I was always intrested in the ironclads myself.  No titles spring
    	to mind but the Acton public library has a nice section on the 
    	Civil War.  They have some photo album type books that have quite
    	a bit of ironclad pictures in them. Monitors and the river type 
    	gunboats. Naval in general, blockade runners etc..
    
    	There is a American Heritage?? (part of a series) book on Ironclads. 
    	It isn't that detailed but it covers the scope of Ironclad
        development.
    
    	As far as crew conditions go...my impressions are that it was new
    	technology for the time...hastily developed..crew comfort was not
    	a priority.. it must have been hot as hell in them, dark metal,
    	with minimal ventilation.. A lot of pictures of the later monitors
    	show them with tent type canopies over the length of the ship
    	for shade when the ships are not at combat readiness.  Also,
    	obviously sea worthiness was the pits.
    	
    	The monitors had a great combat record though.. I think the north
    	only lost two. One to rough seas (the original) and one to a mine
    	(attacking Mobile I think..)
    
    	-DF
31.3Merrimack VS MonitorZEKE::GEORGEsend helpThu Aug 29 1991 16:1510
    I don't know much about the ironclads, nor do I know of any titles of
    books on the subject.  The other day I was in the bookstore of a mall
    and saw a book about the battle between the Merrimack and Monitor.  I'm
    sure that if you check the history section of any good bookstore you'll
    find this particular book.  It was a small paperback, maybe 200 or so
    pages.
    
    Hope this helps...
    
    George
31.4Speaking Of Names...NEMAIL::RASKOBMike Raskob at OFOFri Aug 30 1991 16:1013
    RE .3:
    
    There was some commentary on the different Union & Confederate names
    for battles.  This is another one, and less excusable (except on the
    grounds of alliteration... :^} ).
    
    The U.S.S. Monitor never fought the "Merrimack"; her opponent at
    Hampton Roads was the C.S.S. Virginia, which was built by the
    Confederates starting with the burned & scuttled remains of the U.S.
    steam frigate Merrimack, captured when the Norfolk Navy Yard fell.
    
    MikeR
    
31.5Ahem.SMURF::SMURF::BINDERSine tituloFri Aug 30 1991 20:0511
    Ahem.  Let us get our names *completely* straight, shall we?  :-)
    
    The CSS Virginia was built on the hull of the USS Merrimac, a 350-ton
    40-gun steam frigate that was scuttled in Norfolk's Gosport Navy Yard
    in early 1862.  There is no K at the end of the ship's first name.  The
    town of Merrimack is in New Hampshire, as is the source of the
    Merrimack River.
    
    So there.  :-)
    
    -d
31.6Useful CorrectionNEMAIL::RASKOBMike Raskob at OFOFri Aug 30 1991 22:427
    RE .5:
    
    Will you give us the correct spelling of the Merrimac's sister ships,
    also?  ;^)   (Though they weren't ironclads...)
    
    MikeR
    
31.7Yew betcha!SMURF::SMURF::BINDERSine tituloSat Aug 31 1991 18:156
    Sure, if you mean the ones at Hampton Roads during her engagement with
    the Monitor.  They were the Minnesota and the Roanoke.
    
    :-)
    
    -d
31.8one book on the subjectMAASUP::FILERFri Sep 06 1991 19:1141
	I have just started reading, what seems to be a very good 
book on this subject, titled Aboard The USS Monitor: 1862. It is 
a collection of letters written by Acting Paymaster William Keeler 
USN to his wife in LaSalle, IL. It was Edited by Robert Daly a 
Professor at the US Naval Academy. (copyright 1964. L of C cc#64-12501)
Keeler became assigned to the Monitor during construction in Brooklyn,
NY. and wrote to his wife every day or two.
	From his description of his stateroom it seems to be very much
like the staterooms aboard the USS Ethan Allen SSBN 608 except that he
had a room to himself while modern submarine officers are two to a room
(except the Capt.). He had a bunk which was slightly over 6" long and
was built over storage area and more storage in lockers built over the 
berth. His stateroom also had a built in desk and washbowl. There was a 
skylight over the desk which from his description was like a ships port
hole with a cover placed over it while in action.
	The Monitor carried a crew of 59 total. He names 10 officers
and 7 petty officers early on in the book. A "darkie" was on board as
a servant to the officers (drawing navy pay full or part is not stated).
	The Monitor was armed with 2 11-in Dahlgrens which fired 166 lb.
shot or 135 lb. shell. Later versions of this craft were fitted with
15in. Dahlgrens firing massive 441 lb. shot or 330 lb. shell. The first
time these guns were fired was during her battle with the Merrimac/Virginia.
No testing was done of these guns and they were just guessing at the powder
load. During this famous battle only 1 bag of powder was used if they
used 3 (which they later found a safe load) the outcome most likely would
have changed. The CSS Virginia (Merrimac) could not withstand the 20 hits
she suffered if the powder was 3 bags vs 1.
	The rebel ship had the Monitor badly out gunned (10 to 2) but
the only damage was one round hitting the turret stunned 2 of the gun crew.
(they returned to there gun in only a few min.) and one round hit the pilot
house blinding Capt. Worden (rank of Lt.). Two of the 22 rounds which hit
the Monitor were fired from the USS Minnesota which had run aground during
a previous battle with the Merrimac/Virginia.
	Paymaster Keeler did not know the real damage to the Merrimac/
Virginia but the editor stated that the worst of her damage was done when
she rammed the USS Cumberland (24 guns). The Ram was broken off and bow damaged
slightly. This ram would not have helped her fight the Monitor as the smaller
craft was far to maneuverable to be rammed with any force.

Jeff Filer

31.9River Ironclads Were SunkODIXIE::RRODRIGUEZTue Oct 22 1991 12:5626
    
    	There is a book called, simply, "The Navies".  It is a very
    nice blend of enjoyable and informative reading.  It goes into
    the river and sea campaigns.  I will get specifics for you after
    I go home and get the book.  It devotes alot of attention to
    the ironclads.
    	The book also went into newer forms of ironclads that emerged
    before the end of the war.  There were "double turreted" monitors.
    Somebody alluded to one of these, the U.S.S. New Ironsides that
    was "torpedoed" by the Confederate "submarine", "David".  It was
    only slightly damaged, not sunk.  
     	The river forms were a different class that came to be called
    "tin-clads" because the were lighter (to achieve shallower draft).
    Of these, more than a few were sunk.  They were sunk more often in
    actions against forts than actions with hostile ships.  Some of
    the classes that come to mind (if memory serves) were the Kickapoo,
    looked like a "Merrimac/Virginia", but as an exposed stern-wheeler
    for river use.  I believe the "Carondolet" was an ironclad flagship
    that was sunk.
    	To answer an old question, "yes" more were lost than the Monitor
    and Virginia.  There was a Virginia style Confederate ship at Mobile
    Bay called the Tennessee.  It was not quite ready for battle and was
    sunk by a Union ram while dead in the water.
    
     2
    r
31.10130 years ago todayHARDY::SCHWEIKERthough it means an extra mile...Tue Mar 10 1992 21:15102
	I extracted much of the information below from "The United States 
	Navy" by Edward L. Beach. He uses a lot of original sources to
	indicate that the draw that occurred was by no means inevitable.
	See also my note 55.257 in HISTORY. (kp7 to add)
 
re 50.99
>    	In the ensuing encounter, two Union vessels are put out of
>    commission - the USS CUMBERLAND and the USS ROANOKE - the USS MINNESOTA
>    is heavily damaged. Flag Officer Franklin Buchanan of the MERRIMACK is
>    slightly wounded during the fight, though in general, few Confederates

	It was the "Congress" and not the "Roanoke" which was run ashore
	and burned by the "Virginia".

	Buchanan was struck in the femoral artery by a bullet fired from
	shore during the engagement with the "Congress". The wound was
	serious enough that his executive officer assumed command that
	day, and Buchanan was ashore for the fight with the "Monitor".
	This is significant because the XO was not as aggressive. If
	Buchanan had not been hurt, he probably would have made a serious
	effort to destroy the "Minnesota" (and "Roanoke" and "St.Lawrence")
	either the first or second day, and what could the "Monitor" have
	done to stop it if he had simply ignored her?

	This operation would not have been risk free, after all the 
	"Virginia" had a greater draft than the other ships which were
	aground. If the "Virginia" had either run aground or had her engines
	fail so she became unmaneuverable, she could easily have been 
	captured by boarding by the vastly superior manpower of the Union
	fleet. But given that Buchanan later attacked Farragut's entire
	fleet in Mobile Bay with just the ram "Tennessee", he would probably
	have risked it.
    
re 31.5
>    Ahem.  Let us get our names *completely* straight, shall we?  :-)
    
>    The CSS Virginia was built on the hull of the USS Merrimac, a 350-ton
>    40-gun steam frigate that was scuttled in Norfolk's Gosport Navy Yard
>    in early 1862.  There is no K at the end of the ship's first name.  The
>    town of Merrimack is in New Hampshire, as is the source of the
>    Merrimack River.
    
        This is not as cut and dried as you may think, for one thing I think
        the ship was named was named for the river! While older sources
	omit the K, modern sources (such as the U.S.Navy Memorial Foundation
	1992 calendar and _IRONCLAD_ by Arthur Mokin, published in 1991)
	tend to use the K. Any idea why the revisionists are doing this?
 
re 31.8
>	The Monitor was armed with 2 11-in Dahlgrens which fired 166 lb.
>shot or 135 lb. shell. Later versions of this craft were fitted with
>15in. Dahlgrens firing massive 441 lb. shot or 330 lb. shell. The first
>time these guns were fired was during her battle with the Merrimac/Virginia.
>No testing was done of these guns and they were just guessing at the powder
>load. During this famous battle only 1 bag of powder was used if they
>used 3 (which they later found a safe load) the outcome most likely would
>have changed. The CSS Virginia (Merrimac) could not withstand the 20 hits
>she suffered if the powder was 3 bags vs 1.

	According to Beach, the guns had been tested for the higher charge,
	but since an explosion of an experimental cannon on the "Princeton"
	which killed several top government officials, the Navy was 
	forbidden to fire more than half a charge, and the Monitor's
	captain refused to disobey this even in battle.

	Mokin says the reason was both the "Princeton" disaster, and also
	that top officials were worried about the effect of firing inside
	an enclosed turret. He quotes Ericsson as being livid that officials
	were trying to bury the concept of his ship by using such small guns
	(he wanted 15" from the beginning) and limiting the charge.

>	The rebel ship had the Monitor badly out gunned (10 to 2) but

	A fairer comparison would be 4 to 2, since the "Virginia" had two
	guns damaged the previous day, and as the guns were broadside
	mounted could not fire them all to one side. Given the "Monitor's"
	larger weapons, there was not that much of a mismatch.

>the only damage was one round hitting the turret stunned 2 of the gun crew.
>(they returned to there gun in only a few min.) and one round hit the pilot
>house blinding Capt. Worden (rank of Lt.). Two of the 22 rounds which hit
>the Monitor were fired from the USS Minnesota which had run aground during
>a previous battle with the Merrimac/Virginia.

	Once again, it is hard to guess whether the injury to the captain
	led to excessive caution by the executive officer. When the 
	"Virginia" withdrew, the "Monitor" simply stood by the "Minnesota" 
	(to do what?). Suppose that a more aggressive officer had followed
	the "Virginia" upstream, firing at close range at the rudder and
	propellor. 

>	Paymaster Keeler did not know the real damage to the Merrimac/
>Virginia but the editor stated that the worst of her damage was done when
>she rammed the USS Cumberland (24 guns). The Ram was broken off and bow 

	The "Virginia" was nearly sunk by a wooden sailing ship, as the
	"Cumberland" started sinking with the ram still embedded. The
	"Virginia's" front gun ports were nearly down to the water line
	when the ram broke off, and with all that armor, she would have 
	gone down quickly once the water started pouring in.

31.11Could be MA not NH!USEM::PMARTINWed Mar 11 1992 15:202
    For what it's worth, there's a town in Massachusetts called Merrimac
    which is on the Merrimack River.
31.12On Caution...NEMAIL::RASKOBMike Raskob at OFOWed Mar 11 1992 15:3122
    RE .10:
    
    A good set of comments.  One point on "cautious executive officers" is
    worth making - at that time, (and based on the observed results of the
    two days of battle) the U.S.S. Monitor was the _one_ ship the Navy
    could not afford to lose.  Also, her main purpose had been accomplished
    in stopping the Virginia.  So the Monitor's exec was acting prudently,
    and the added risk of chasing the Virginia was not worth the potential
    gain.
    
    I'm not sure the Virginia _could_ have been much more agressive.  She
    was too unseaworthy to venture out very far, and the Federal wooden
    ships had withdrawn (or were aground) ;^) to shallow water, so that the
    Monitor could have always interposed between Virginia and another U.S.
    ship.  Virginia did try to ram Monitor, but was very restricted by her
    clumsiness and deep draft.  It may be that Virginia was more valuable
    to the Confederacy (for awhile) as a threat than if she had destroyed
    herself in sinking or damaging another two or three ships.  It would
    have been hard for her to seriously hurt Monitor, while Monitor _did_
    have the capability to damage Virginia.
    
    MikeR
31.13The Confederate ironcladsSTRATA::RUDMANAlways the Black Knight.Fri Apr 10 1992 17:49268
    It seems I'm on a "ship kick" (see STKCSC::HISTORY Historical Ships
    and the TRIVIA file)--here is a list of all the Rebel ironclads I've
    read about (to date).
    
    If you know of any more of 'em. please feel free to enter the data.
    
    							Don

     			The Confederate Ironclads

CSS Albermarle -Built in the winter of 1863-64 on the shores of the Roanoke 
                River, North Carolina, and was commisioned on April 17.
                Near Plymouth, on the 19th, the ironclad attacked two Federal 
                armed side-wheel steamers, ramming the CSS Smithfield (which 
                sank) and survived the guns of the steamer Miami and other 
                Confederate vessels.  Plymouth, under attack by CSA forces, 
                surrendered.
                On May 5, nine Union ships waited to attack the approaching
                ironclad.  During the battle, the bronze-beaked side-wheeler
                USS Sassacus rammed the Albermarle, doing little damage except
                to herself; the Albermarle withdrew.
                On the night of October 27-28, a volunteer crew in a Federal
                steam launch exploded a spar torpedo close enough to breach
                the hull; the Albemarle sank.  It was raised by the Union in
                April of 1865, too late to use her against the Confederacy.
                Condemmed as a prize of war, she was sold to the U.S. Navy and
                later sold by the navy in 1867.

CSS Arkansas -Covered with railroad iron and boiler plate, on July 12, 1862
              was sent to run past the Union Fleet on the Mississippi.  In
              the Yazoo River she attacked the ironclad Carondelet and the
              steam rams Tyler and Queen of the West.  Driving the ironclad
              ashore, she chased the pair into the Mississippi and on down 
              to Vicksburg, where she fired 80+ shots into the USS Lancaster
              and endured the shots & shells of the entire Union fleet.  
              Losing 12 men (w/18 wounded) to minie balls and shrapnel, she 
              arrived at Vicksburg, where that night suffered a 160-lb bolt
              into her engine room, killing 8 more and wounding 11.  10 days
              later she was unsuccessfully attacked by the ironclad Essex and
              the steam ram Queen of the West.
              On the way to Baton Rouge to support an army attack there, her
              starboard engine gave out.  Attacked by the USS Essex, she was
              destroyed by her crew to avoid capture.  The Rebels, without the 
              aid of the powerful ironclad, were forced out of the city.

CSS Atlanta -An ironclad ram, she was the rebuilt blockade runner Fingal 
             (Spring of 1862), and carried a spar torpedo.  Sent to attack the 
             Federal fleet blockading the coast off Savannah, she engaged the 
             Union ironclads Weehawken and Nahant on June 17, 1863.  Entering
             an area of shallow water, she was unable to avoid the Weekawken,
             who fired two shots close in which did much damage, including
             blowing a hole at the waterline.  Trapped by the two Federal
             vessels and taking on water, the CSS Atlanta surrendered.  Later
             repaired by the Union, she became the USS Atlanta and in 1864
             joined the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron.

CSS Charleston -Blown up to avoid capture in February of 1865.

CSS Chicora -Second casemated ironclad, 1862.  At Charleston (with the Palmetto
             State) she fired at a schooner and then the wooden sidewheeler 
             Keystone State, which burst into flames.  (Also damaged and taken 
             in the action was the gunboat Mercedita.)  The remaining Federal 
             ships warily kept their distance.
             At the unsuccessful Union attack on Fort Sumter on April 7, 1863,
             she and the Palmetto State were held in reserve in the event the
             Federals had made it past the fort.  No Federal ships did.
             In February of 1865 the Chicora was blown up to avoid capture.

CSS Fredericksburg -On January 23, 1865, the James River Squadron, consisting
                    of the ironclads Fredericksburg, Richmond, Virginia No. 2, 
                    the wooden gunboats Beaufort, Drewry, Hampton, Nansemond, 
                    three small torpedo launches, and the converted tug Torpedo
                    started down the river towards City Point on the James.  The
                    ships began running aground in the shallow river; the
                    Richmond and the Drewry grounded first, then the Torpedo.
                    At midnight the Virginia No. 2 got stuck on a shoal at 
                    Trent's Reach; the Fredericksburg was the only ship to 
                    successfully navigate the Federal river obstructions but was
                    ordered to pull back and cover the grounded Richmond and
     	            two other ships.  The Confederates brought in a powerful 
                    Drummond light and began to fire at the stranded vessels.  A
                    shell hit the Drewry's magazine and it blew up; the fire was
                    then directed at the Virginia No. 2 and the others ships in 
                    range.  Then the double-turreted monitor Onondaga arrived 
                    and added her 15-inch guns to the opposition.  Five hours 
                    later the tidal river rose, the last grounded ship floated 
                    free (the Virginia), and the battered survivors retreated
                    upstream.
                    Near Richmond, on April 3, 1865, she exploded after being 
                    set afire to avoid capture.

CSS Louisiana -In April of 1862, this unfinished ironclad was towed into place 
               as mechanics worked on her to fight in the Battle of Mobile Bay.
               Although unfinished, she survived the battle and escaped to
               Fort Jackson, where she was set afire and blown up to avoid 
               capture.

CSS Manassas -An ironclad ram, formally the New England icebreaker Enoch Train;
              the first Confederate ironclad to see action when she drove a hole
              in the hull of the USS Richmond on October 12, 1861, commiting the
              first act of war ever struck by an ironclad ram.  She then ran the
              Richmond and another wooden ship (the Vincennes) aground; an early
              victory for the Confederate Navy.
              On April 24, 1862, she rammed and sunk the USS Varuna near New
              Orleans.
              In 1864 she participated in the Battle of Mobile Bay, one of the 
              first to engage; riddled by shells from two Union gunboats, her 
              crew escaped into the swamp and the Manassas slipped to the 
              bottom of the river.

CSS Milledgeville -Ironclad blown up to avoid capture near the end of the war.

CSS Mississippi -Unfinished when the Federal fleet arrived at New Orleans on
                 April 25, 1862, she was torched and set adrift so she wouldn't 
                 fall into Union hands.

CSS Missouri -Completed late 1863, this ironclad plied the hazardous Red River 
              with seven gunboats and twelve other ironclads.  
              The Missouri was the last Confederate ironclad to surrender to
              Union forces in home waters, at Shreveport, Louisianna, June 3, 
              1865.

CSS Morgan -an ironclad?

CSS Nashville -Built in England, this 271' ironclad sidewheeler sailed on
               February 3, 1862, as the USS Tuscarora watched helplessly, held 
               in port by the British until the Nashville was well on her way.
               Participating in the defense of Mobile, she saw action near the 
               end of the war in a battle near Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, 
               when the Union captured the city on April 12, 1865.  
               The Nashville and the other surviving Rebel vessels were 
               surrendered on May 4.

CSS Neuse -Built on the Neuse River, the unblooded ironclad was captured and 
           destroyed by Union forces in 1864.

CSS Palmetto State -First casemated ironclad, 1862.  At Charleston (with the
                    CSS Chicora) she rammed the USS Mercedita and fired her bow
                    gun into the Federal's boiler--without power, the Mercedita 
                    surrendered.  After the Chicora attacked two other Union 
                    vessels, the remaining Federal ships warily kept their 
                    distance.
                    At the unsuccessful Union attack on Fort Sumter on April 7,
                    1863, she and the CSS Chicora were held in reserve in the 
                    event the Federals had made it past the fort.  No Federal 
                    ships did.
                    In February of 1865 the Palmetto State was blown up to avoid
                    capture.

CSS Richmond -Completed in July of 1862, she was with the James River Squadron
              moving on City Point on the James River in January of 1865.  (The
              fleet consisted of the ironclads Fredericksburg, Virginia No. 2, 
              Richmond, four wooden gunboats, three torpedo launches, and a 
              converted tug.)  The Richmond ran aground at 8:30 PM on the 23rd 
              and came under fire by Federal shore batteries before dawn the 
              next day, and later was attacked by the monitor USS Onondaga.  
              Practically undamaged, she soon floated free as the tidal river 
              rose and she retreated upriver.
              On April 3, 1865, near Richmond, she exploded after being set 
              afire to avoid capture.

CSS Stonewall -Originally the French-backed, British-built Sphinx, it was seized
               and sold to Denmark, but the Confederates arranged for the Sphinx
               (now the "Staer Kodder") to be purposely mishandled to fail her 
               Danish sea-trials so the French-registered ironclad could be sold
               to the Confederacy.  (Actually, the ironclad *was* poorly built, 
               so failing her trials wasn't too difficult.)  Manned by the 
               ex-crew of the commerce raider Florida and the newly-built 
               Rappahanock (seized in port by the British), the CSS Stonewall 
               Jackson a severe storm on January 29-30, 1865, and limped into 
               El Ferrol, Spain for repairs.  
               On February 11 the Union frigate Niagara arrived in port, soon 
               joined by the USS Sacremento.  On March 24, the Stonewall's spars
               were removed and that night she left port to do battle, but the 
               two Federal ships, intimidated by the fierce-looking ironclad, 
               remained at anchor.  Not wanting to cross the Atlantic without
               sails, she ran down to Lisbon, where the Port authorities gave 
               them 24 hours to leave.  The two Federals followed her into port.
               The Stonewall, with new spars, left port the next day under sail;
               the Union ships were detained for 24 hours (under International 
               Law).  
               Unaware of the war situation, the CSS Stonewall entered Havana, 
               Cuba on May 11 (the day after President Davis was captured).  
               Warships of the Federal Navy followed her in.  (With the Union 
               fleet were the ironclad monitors Canonicus and Monadnock, towed 
               from Cape Fear to Havana, the first instance of monitors leaving
               their sheltered home waters).
               Captain Dale turned the Stonewall over to the Spanish authorities
               for a mere $16,000 (to cover the crew's payroll).  Two months
               later the Spanish Government ceded the vessel to the U.S. (the
               only claimant).  It was then sold to Japan, where it became the
               Kotetsukan, Adzumakan, and finally the Adzuma, the first ironclad
               in the Japanese Imperial Fleet.

CSS Tennessee -(Not to be confused with the later wooden CSS Tennessee.)  One 
               of the most powerful ironclad rams in the Confederate Navy, with 
               6" armor.  She took on the entire Union fleet at the Battle of 
               Mobile Bay in 1864.  The Union wooden ships Monongahela and
               Lackawanna rammed her, damaging the ironclad.  The USS Hartford
               fired a broadside, which bounced off.  The rest of the fleet 
               followed suit, including the four Union monitors Tecumseh,
               Manhattan, Winnebago, and Chickasaw (which fired more than 50 
               solid shots into the Tennessee).  Rudder chains shot away, the 
               battered, out-of-control ironclad surrendered.

CSS Texas -An unfinished ironclad ram, captured by Federal forces when Richmond
           fell.

CSS Virginia -The rebuilt Merrimack, a steam frigate captured from the Union 
              at the onset of the Civil War, was the CSA's first ironclad ram.
              She was armed with six 9-inch smoothbore Dahlgren's and four 6- &
              7-inch rifled cannon.
              Completed February 17, 1862, she saw her first combat on March 8.
              The Virginia entered Hampton Roads, VA, and fired a shell into 
              the USS Cumberland, then slowly rammed her while the Cumberland
              fired back, damaging two of Virginia's guns.  3200 tons of force
              embedded the 1500 lb. ram in the Cumberland's side, and stayed 
              there as the Virginia reversed propeller.  As the Cumberland sank
              to her masts, the ironclad went after the stranded USS Congress, 
              which had ran aground fleeing from the Virginia.  Unable to
              ram the Congress in the shallow water, the Virginia stood off 
              and, along with her two wooden escorts, pounded the Congress 
              until she ran up the white flag.  Unfortunately, Rebel shore
              batteries opened up on the Virginia, so Captain Buchanan 
              recalled the boarding party and began firing heated shot into 
              the stricken Congress.  
              Night was coming on and the tide was falling, so the Virginia 
              fired a few last shots into the now-grounded USS Minnesota and 
              retreated by the light of the blazing Congress.  (Shortly after 
              midnight the fires reached the ship's magazines; the Congress 
              exploded with a tremendous roar.)  In the battle there were 300 
              Federal casualties; the Confederate killed or wounded numbered 
              only 31.
              Repaired and improved, the Virginia returned to Hampton Roads on
              April 11, where the newly-arrived ironclad Monitor, aware of her 
              shortcomings, stayed under the protection of the Federal shore 
              batteries.  The Virginia took three wooden Union vessels while the
              Federals looked on, taunted by three upside-down American flags.
              Unable to lighten her draft and escape up the James River as the 
              Federals marched on Norfolk, the Confederates ran her aground at 
              Craney Island and set her afire at 3 AM on May 11; three hours
              later the Virginia blew up when the fires reached her magazines.

Virginia No. 2 -This ironclad was with the James River Squadron moving on City 
                Point on the James River in January of 1865.  (The squadron 
                consisted of the ironclads Fredericksburg, Virginia No. 2, 
                Richmond, four wooden gunboats, three torpedo launches, and a 
                converted tug.)  Stuck on a shoal at Trent's Reach at midnight 
                of the 23rd, she was attacked by Federal shore batteries and 
                later by the monitor USS Onondaga (after the gunboat Drewry blew
                up).  Damaged, the Virginia finally floated free at 10:30 the 
                next morning as the river rose and the severely mauled fleet 
                retreated upriver.
                On April 3, 1865, near Richmond, she exploded after being set 
                afire to avoid capture.

CSS Wilmington -Ironclad blown up to avoid capture near the end of the war.

No. 61 -("Santa Maria" to the Confederates, "Lt. North's ironclad", after
        construction supervisor Commander James H. North, to the Union)  Built 
        in Glasgow, Scotland, it was 270' long.  Begun in 1862, pressure from
        the British Goverment caused North to transfer the title to her builders
        and it was sold to Denmark.  Historians felt the powerful, heavily
        armored, double-turreted ironclad might have made a difference in the
        outcome of the war if she had been let loose on Northern ports and
        shipping.  Instead, it became the "Danmark".
        

31.14The Union ironcladsSTRATA::RUDMANAlways the Black Knight.Fri Apr 10 1992 17:52381
    
    
    Some of these are a bit rough around the edges, as groups of them
    fought in the same engagements, so some of the entries sound
    repetitious.  I'll fix 'em, but since this note began talking about
    the ironclads in more detail I though it best not to wait.
    
    Again. if you have any additions, please add 'em.
    
    							Don
    
    
     			The Federal Ironclads
                                                           
USS Albatross -Escorted the USS Hartford (Admiral D.G. Farragut's flagship)
               down the Mississippi to Vicksburg in March of 1863, and 
               there attacked shore batteries at Warrenton on the 23rd.
               On the 31st, she and two wooden ships successfully passed
               Confederate shore batteries at Grand Gulf, Mississippi.  Also
               during the Vicksburg Campaign, on May 4, she and several wooden 
               vessels attacked Fort De Russy, on Louisianna's Red River; the
               only effect was damage to the Albatross.  (The Union built dams 
               on the hazardous river to safely float their vessels.)

USS Baron de Kalb -Formerly the USS St. Louis, this ironclad was blown up by a 
                   Confederate torpedo near Yazoo City, July 13, 1863.  (See
                   the "USS St. Louis" entry.)

USS Benson -With the ironclads Carondelet, Cincinnati, Mound City, and three 
            other ironclads, she participated in the first American fleet 
            engagement while attacking Fort Pillow on May 10, 1862.

USS Cairo -This ironclad struck two homemade Confederate mines moored in the 
           Yazoo River, sinking in 12 minutes, becoming the first ship of war 
           sunk by an underwater mine, December 12, 1862.  Raising of the 
           vessel began in 1960.

USS Camanche -Shipped dismantled on the Aquila to San Francisco to attack 
              Confederate shipping, but the still-loaded Aquila sank in San 
              Francisco harbor in November of 1863.  Salvaged by a wrecking 
              crew, the parts were cleaned and assembled and the Camanche was
              officially launched on November 14, 1864, but wasn't commisioned 
              until May 24, 1865 after the war was over.  It remained in service
              until 1899.  It has been said the Camanche is the only ship that
              ever sank *before* being launched.

USS Canonicus -She and the ironclads Mahopac, Monadnock, New Ironsides, and
               Saugus were with the Federal fleet during the attack on Fort 
               Fisher, at Cape Fear (near Wilmington) on January 15, 1865.
               None of the ironclads suffered any damage.
               She and another ironclad monitor (the USS Monadnock) were towed
               from Cape Fear to Havana, Cuba in mid-May of 1865, where the 
               Union fleet bottled up the CSS Stonewall Jackson, whose captain 
               turned the Confederate ironclad over to the Spanish authorities.
               It was the first instance of monitors leaving their sheltered
               home waters.

USS Carondelet -With the ironclads Cincinnati, Essex, and St. Louis, she 
                attacked and captured Fort Henry on the Tennessee River on 
                February 6, 1862.  Next, they and the ironclad Louisville
                attacked Fort Donelson on February 14--all were damaged and
                the attack repulsed.  On the first of March the Confederates 
                attempted to retreat, but were stopped and the fort fell.
                With the ironclad USS Pittsburgh, she participated in the 
                taking of Island #10 at New Madrid, Missouri, April 7, 1862.
                Later, with the ironclads Benson, Cincinnati, Mound City, and 
                three other ironclads, she participated in the first American 
                fleet engagement while attacking Fort Pillow on May 10, 1862.
                On July 12, 1862 she was run aground in the Yazoo River by the
                powerful Confederate ironclad Arkansas.

USS Chickasaw -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
               and the three other monitors present (Manhattan, Tecumseh, and 
               Winnebago) helped defend the fleet against the attacking 
               ironclad CSS Tennessee.  The Chickasaw fired more than fifty
               solid shots into the Confederate; rudder chains shot away, 
               the battered, out-of-control Tennessee surrendered.

USS Cincinnati -With the ironclads Carondelet, Essex, and St. Louis, she
                attacked and captured Fort Henry on the Tennessee River on
                February 6, 1862.  Hit by shore batteries, she sustained no
                damage.  Next, the group (plus the ironclad Louisville)
                attacked Fort Donelson on February 14--all were damaged and 
                the attack repulsed.  On the first of March the Confederates 
                attempted to retreat, but were stopped and the fort fell.
                Later, with the ironclads Benson, Carondelet, Mound City, and 
                three other ironclads, she participated in the first American 
                fleet engagement while attacking Fort Pillow on May 10, 1862.  
                Eight gunboats attack the Federal ironclads, sinking the 
                Cincinnati and the Mound City.
                [After the loss of the Cincinatti, a wooden vessel of the same
                name was destroyed by shore batteries at Fort Hill on the
                Mississippi on May 27, 1863.]

USS Dictator -An over-sized monitor which saw little action during the war.

USS Eastport -The largest and most powerful ironclad in Admiral Porter's Red 
              River fleet, consisting of thirteen ironclads and seven gunboats;
              on March 10, 1864, the Red River Campaign opens as the fleet moves
              downriver, having trouble navigating the rapids and the shallow 
              water.
              On the way to Alexandria with a force of wooden ships, the 
              Eastport struck a torpedo and sank on April 15.  A Confederate 
              shell strikes the boiler of the wooden Champion No. 3, killing
              almost 200 Negroes removed from the plantations. 
              Raised on the 21st, the Eastport again moved down the river, but 
              ran aground several times as the river fell; finally, on April 26,
              she was blown up to avoid capture.
              [On May 13, the last of the fleet passed Union-built dams and
              headed for the Mississippi River, a notable recovery from what
              had otherwise been a humiliating and disasterous failure for the
              North; in two months the Army and Navy casualties were more than
              5000.]

USS Essex -(formally New Era)  With the ironclads Carondelet, Cincinnati, and 
           St. Louis, she attacked and captured Fort Henry on the Tennessee 
           River on February 6, 1862; the Essex was damaged by the fort's 
           rifled gunfire, went out of control, and drifted downstream.  Next, 
           on February 14, the four ironclads (plus the ironclad Louisville)
           attacked Fort Donelson on February 14--all were damaged and the 
           attack repulsed.  On the first of March the Confederates attempted 
           to retreat, but were stopped and the fort fell.
           On July 22, 1862, the Essex and the steam ram Queen of the West
           unsuccessfully attacked the CSS Arkansas.  Pursueing the Arkansas 
           (bound for Baton Rouge to support an army attack there), the Essex 
           caught up with her when the ironclad's starboard engine gave out.  
           Under sustained attack, the Confederates destroyed the Arkansas to 
           avoid capture.

USS Galena -This armored warship was hit 28 times (18 perforations) by Rebel
            shore batteries during an attack on Fort Darling (Drewry's Bluff),
            near Richmond, on May 15, 1862, before running out of ammunition 
            and withdrawing; her obvious vulnerability ended her career as an 
            ironclad.  (Accompanying the Galena were the ironclads Monitor and 
            Naugatuck.)

USS Indianola -A badly built, inefficient ironclad gunboat built in late 1863 
               or early 1864.  On February 12 she made a successful run past 
               Confederate shore batteries at Vicksburg, taking up a position
               at the juncture of the Red and Mississippi Rivers on the 17th to
               harrass Southern vessels heading upriver to Vicksburg.
               On February 24 or 25, in the Red River, she engaged the captured
               (ex-Union) steam ram Queen of the West and the fast Confederate
               ram William H. Webb.  Rammed by both ships, the sinking ironclad
               was run onto the shore and surrendered.  Later, the Rebels tried
               to salvage her, but a dummy wooden ironclad built by Admiral 
               Porter's men and floated down the river fooled them into blowing
               up the Indianola to avoid recapture--this great wooden hoax 
               infuriated Southerners.

               [Captured and repaired by the Confederates, her name unchanged, 
               the Queen of the West was blown up by Union gunboats at Grand 
               Lake, Louisianna, on April 14, 1863.  The William H. Webb was 
               later trapped by the USS Richmond at the mouth of the Mississipi
               on April 26, 1865, and was burned by the Confederates to avoid 
               capture.]

USS Keokuk -A round-backed armored "turtle" riddled by Confederate shot at 
            Charleston on April 7, 1863 before she could fire three shots, 19 
            of the 90 shots which hit the Keokuk penetrated at or below the 
            waterline; the double-turreted ironclad sank the following morning.
            That night, Confederate defenders of Charleston removed the turret
            underwater and salvaged the guns for use in the defense of the city.

USS Louisville -With the ironclads Carondelet, Cincinnati, Essex, and St. Louis,
                she attacked Fort Donelson on February 14--all were damaged and 
                the attack repulsed.  On the first of March the Confederates 
                attempted to retreat, but were stopped and the fort fell.

USS Mahopac -She and the ironclads Canonicus, Monadnock, New Ironsides, and
             Saugus were with the Federal fleet during the attack on Fort 
             Fisher, at Cape Fear (near Wilmington) on January 15, 1865.  None
             of the ironclads were damaged.

USS Manhattan -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
               and the three other monitors present (Chickasaw, Tecumseh, and 
               Winnebago) defended the fleet against the attacking Confederate 
               ironclad Tennessee, which surrendered after being badly damaged.

USS Miantonomoh -The first ironclad monitor to cross the Atlantic, visiting
                 England and Russia, 1866.

USS Monadnock -She and the ironclads Canonicus, Mahopac, New Ironsides, and
               Saugus were with the Federal fleet during the attack on Fort 
               Fisher, at Cape Fear (near Wilmington) on January 15, 1865.  
               None of the ironclads suffered any damage.
               The Monadnock and the Canonicus were towed from Cape Fear to 
               Havana, Cuba in mid-May of 1865, where the Union fleet bottled up
               the CSS Stonewall Jackson, whose captain turned the Confederate 
               ironclad over to the Spanish authorities.  It was the first 
               instance of monitors leaving their sheltered home waters.
               The Monadnock was the first ironclad which sailed to San 
               Francisco 'round Cape Horn, 1865-66.

USS Monitor -The United States' first true ironclad, designed by Swedish-born 
             John Ericsson and launched at Greenpoint, Long Island, January 
             30th, 1862.  
             Towed by the tugboat Seth Low from New York through rough seas, the
             Union ironclad arrived at Hampton Roads on April 11, 1862, while 
             the USS Congress was still burning.  In the morning, the CSA 
             ironclad Virginia was seen coming from Sewell's Point.  After 
             firing a shot at the USS Minnesota, the Virginia spotted the 
             Monitor just before it fired a solid 170-lb. shot, cracking the 
             Confederate's armor.  The Monitor's second 11-inch Blakely rifle 
             fired, with the same result.  The ironclads circled and traded 
             shots--no serious damage.  The Monitor then tried to ram the 
             Virginia, but missed.  The Virginia ran aground; while she 
             struggled to free herself from the mud she fired and hit the 
             Minnesota and the Federal tug Dragon.  Free, she then rammed the 
             Monitor, but without her ram all it succeeded in doing was to
             re-open its own damaged hull, allowing water to poor in.  While the
             Virginia made emergency repairs, the Monitor sought refuge in 
             shallow water and reloaded her turret.  Returning to the battle, 
             the Virginia concentrated her fire at the Monitor's turret--a 
             direct hit temporarily blinded Captain Harper and the Monitor 
             drifted back into shallow water.  By the time the second-in-command
             took over, the Virginia had turned away; the tide was falling, and 
             the deep-draft ironclad had to return to port while there was 
             enough water in the channel to keep her afloat.
             The first battle between ironclads was a draw, although the Monitor
             declined to engage when the repaired Virginia returned for another 
             round.  
             On a morale-boosting visit, President Lincoln visited the Monitor 
             on May 7 and meets with military officials.
             On May 15, the Monitor, the Galena, the Naugatuck, and two wooden
             ships attacked the Confederate Battery at Drewry's Bluff (Fort
             Darling to the Union), resulting in a very poor showing; the 
             Monitor couldn't elevate her guns to fire on the fort, the 
             Naugatuck's single cannon blew up, and the Galena was perforated
             so many times she was converted into an ordinary wooden gunboat.
             Later that year, the low-riding Monitor was lost on December 31, 
             1862, when she foundered while under tow in a severe winter storm 
             off Cape Hatteras.  The USS Rhode Island rescued 47; 16 die in
             the deadly water.

USS Montauk -Sent to attack Fort McAllister on the Ogeechee River (near 
             Savannah, Ga.) in 1863, she spent most of the 27 of January
             bombarding the fort; on February 28 she destroyed the well-known 
             Confederate commerce raider Nashville, also on the Ogeechee.
             (The Montauk was captained by Commander J. L. Worden, late of the 
             lost USS Monitor.)
             With the ironclads Keokuk and New Ironsides, the Weehawken and 
             seven other monitors, the Montauk advanced on Fort Sumter on April
             7, 1863.  Shore batteries at Sumter and Fort Moultrie damaged the 
             monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, Patapsco, and Weehawken, and
             the ironclad Keokuk, which sank the next day.  Unable to seriously 
             damage the fort, the little fleet withdrew.  
             For its final noteriety, the Montauk was used for the autopsy of
             John Wilkes Booth while she was anchored in the Washington Navy
             Yard.

USS Mound City - With the ironclads Benson, Carondelet, Cincinnati, and three 
                 other ironclads, she participated in the first American fleet 
                engagement while attacking Fort Pillow on May 10, 1862.  Eight
                gunboats attack the Federal ironclads, sinking the Mound City
                and the Cincinnati.
                (There was also a Federal steamer named Mound City, damaged 
                when her boiler exploded under Confederate battery fire at St.
                Charles, Arkansas, on June 17, 1862.)

USS Nahant -With the Union fleet off the coast of Savannah on June 17, 1863,
            she was outdistanced by the ironclad USS Weehawken when the pair
            moved to meet the attacking CSS Atlanta; her contribution was to 
            help trap the sinking Confederate in shallow water until the 
            ironclad surrendered.  

USS Naugatuck -(AKA the "Stevens Battery")  An armored vessel carrying one
               long-distance 100-lb. Parrot gun; she was put out of action
               during an attack on Fort Darling (near Richmond) when the gun 
               exploded, hurling part of its massive breech into the James 
               River.  (With the Naugatuck were the ironclads Monitor and 
               Galena; the Galena sustained serious damage.)

USS Nantucket -With the ironclads Keokuk and New Ironsides, the Weehawken and 
               seven other monitors, the Nantucket advanced on Fort Sumter on 
               April 7, 1863.  Shore batteries at Sumter and Fort Moultrie 
               damaged the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, Patapsco, and 
               Weehawken, and the ironclad Keokuk, which sank the next day.  
               Unable to seriously damage the fort, the little fleet withdrew.  

USS New Ironsides -Built in Philadelphia, this double-turreted armored ironclad 
                   saw more action than any other Union ship, and served as the
                   flagship of Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont.
                   With the ironclad Keokuk, the Weehawken and eight other 
                   monitors, she advanced on Fort Sumter on April 7, 1863, but,
                   due to her deep draft, could not move close to the fort; 
                   unable to seriously damage Fort Sumter the little fleet 
                   withdrew.  Shore batteries at Sumter and Fort Moultrie 
                   damaged the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, Patapsco, 
                   and Weehawken, and the ironclad Keokuk, which sunk the next 
                   day.
                   At Charleston, on August 21, 1863, a Confederate steam
                   torpedo boat seriously damaged the ironclad but failed to
                   sink her.
                   She and the ironclads Canonicus, Mahopac, Monadnock, and
                   Saugus were with the Federal fleet during the attack on Fort 
                   Fisher, at Cape Fear (near Wilmington) on January 15, 1865.  
                   None of the ironclads were damaged.
                   The New Ironsides survived the war, but was destroyed in an 
                   accidental fire in December of 1866.

USS Onondaga -A double-turreted ironclad monitor, she attacked a Confederate
              force moving on City Point on the James River on January 24, 1865.
              The three Federal ironclads and their eight wooden escorts 
              retreated, most of them were severely damaged.

USS Passaic -The second Federal single-turreted monitor, first of the "Passaic"
             Class.  With the ironclads Keokuk and New Ironsides, the Weehawken
             and seven other monitors, the Passaic advanced on Fort Sumter on 
             April 7, 1863.  Shore batteries at Sumter and Fort Moultrie damaged
             the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, Patapsco, and Weehawken,
             and the ironclad Keokuk, which sank the next day.  Unable to 
             seriously damage the fort, the little fleet withdrew.  

USS Patapsco -The second Federal single-turreted monitor, first of the "Passaic"
              Class.  With the ironclads Keokuk and New Ironsides, the Weehawken
              and seven other monitors, the Passaic advanced on Fort Sumter on 
              April 7, 1863.  Shore batteries at Sumter and Fort Moultrie 
              damaged the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, Patapsco, and 
              Weehawken, and the ironclad Keokuk, which sank the next day.  
              Unable to seriously damage the fort, the little fleet withdrew.  

USS Pittsburgh -With the ironclad USS Carondelet, she participated in the 
                taking of Island #10 at New Madrid, Missouri, April 7, 1862.

USS Puritan -A large ironclad monitor (similar to the USS Dictator) which never
             made it into the war.

USS Roanoke -An ironclad frigate, larger than the old Merrimack; its armor and
             triple turrets made her badly unbalanced and was considered unsafe.

USS Rodolph -An ironclad supporting General Canby's expedition against Blakely,
             Alabama (near Mobile); on April 1, 1865 she struck a torpedo in
             the Blakely River and sank.

USS Saugus  -She and the ironclads Canonicus, Mahopac, Monadnock, and New 
             Ironsides were with the Federal fleet during the attack on Fort 
             Fisher, at Cape Fear (near Wilmington) on January 15, 1865.  None 
             of the ironclads suffered any damage.

USS St. Louis -Later renamed Baron de Kalb, she and the ironclads Carondelet,
               Cincinnati, and Essex attacked and captured Fort Henry on the 
               Tennessee River in February of 1862.  Next, along with the 
               ironclad Louisville, the group attacked Fort Donelson on February
               14--all the ironclads were damaged and the attack repulsed.  On 
               the first of March the Confederates attempted to retreat, but 
               were stopped, and Fort Donelson fell.  (See the "Baron de Kalb" 
               entry.)

USS Tecumseh -At the Battle of Mobile Bay, in 1864, she helped three other 
              monitors (Chickasaw, Manhattan, and Winnebago) subdue the CSS 
              Tennesssee.  Later in the battle the Tecumseh struck one or more 
              torpedoes, which tore a hole in her bottom, and she sank in 25 
              seconds, killing all but 21 of 114 men.   After the Tecumseh went 
              down on August 5, Admiral Farragut purportedly said, "Damn the 
              torpedoes, full speed ahead!"

USS Weehawken -An ironclad monitor which was the lead ship of a small fleet 
               of ironclads and nine monitors (including the New Ironsides, 
               Keokuk, and the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, and
               Patapsco) which unsuccessfully attacked Fort Sumter on April 7, 
               1863.  Pushing a barge in case of mines, she halted when she 
               found herself surrounded by floating mines, temporarily throwing
               the Union advance into disarray.  Shore batteries at Sumter and
               Fort Moultrie damaged the monitors Montauk, Nantucket, Passaic, 
               Patapsco, and Weehawken, and the ironclad Keokuk, which sank the 
               next day.  Unable to seriously damage the fort, the little fleet 
               withdrew.  
               Aggressively engaging the Confederate ironclad Altanta off the
               coast of Savannah on June 17, 1863, she fired two shots close 
               in; one shot holed the Atlanta at the waterline.  Sinking, the 
               Confederate ironclad surrendered.
               Near Charlston, on December 6, 1863, the Weehawken was lost.
               Overloaded with ammunition, and badly trimmed, water poured into
               an open hatch and she quickly sank, losing 31 men.

USS Winnebago -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
               and the three other monitors present (Chickasaw, Manhattan, and 
               Tecumseh) defended the fleet against the attacking Confederate 
               ironclad Tennessee, which surrendered after being badly damaged.
31.15Union tincladsSTRATA::RUDMANAlways the Black Knight.Fri Apr 10 1992 17:549
     				 Union Tinclads

USS Signal, USS Covington -Captured and destroyed by Confederate cavalry near
                           Alexandria, Louisianna, in May of 1864.

    
    	These are all I've found, but I'd guess there's more....
    
    						Don
31.16battle of Mobile BayHARDY::SCHWEIKERthough it means an extra mile...Thu May 14 1992 23:5863
    
re .13
>CSS Tennessee -(Not to be confused with the later wooden CSS Tennessee.)  One 
>              of the most powerful ironclad rams in the Confederate Navy, with 
>               6" armor.  She took on the entire Union fleet at the Battle of 
>               Mobile Bay in 1864.  The Union wooden ships Monongahela and
>               Lackawanna rammed her, damaging the ironclad.  The USS Hartford
>               fired a broadside, which bounced off.  The rest of the fleet 
>               followed suit, including the four Union monitors Tecumseh,
>               Manhattan, Winnebago, and Chickasaw (which fired more than 50 
>               solid shots into the Tennessee).  Rudder chains shot away, the 
>               battered, out-of-control ironclad surrendered.

	A terse but mostly accurate account of the battle. According
	to E.L.Beach in "The United States Navy", the "Tennessee" was 
	rammed 5 times by wooden vessels, but was too underpowered and
	heavy to ram another vessel. Noting that more damage to the 
	"Virginia" had been done by the "Cumberland" than the "Monitor",
	Farragut ordered his wooden vessels to close with the "Tennessee",
	and they were responsible for most of the damage.

re .14
>USS Tecumseh -At the Battle of Mobile Bay, in 1864, she helped three other 
>              monitors (Chickasaw, Manhattan, and Winnebago) subdue the CSS 
>              Tennesssee.  Later in the battle the Tecumseh struck one or more 
>              torpedoes, which tore a hole in her bottom, and she sank in 25 
>           seconds, killing all but 21 of 114 men.   After the Tecumseh went 
>              down on August 5, Admiral Farragut purportedly said, "Damn the 
>              torpedoes, full speed ahead!"

	The "Tecumseh" was sunk by a mine while trying to enter the bay,
	apparently before firing at the "Tennessee".

>USS Winnebago -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
>               and the three other monitors present (Chickasaw, Manhattan, and 
>               Tecumseh) defended the fleet against the attacking Confederate 
>               ironclad Tennessee, which surrendered after being badly damaged.

	Had turret problems, and also apparently never engaged the "Tennessee".

>USS Manhattan -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
>               and the three other monitors present (Chickasaw, Tecumseh, and 
>               Winnebago) defended the fleet against the attacking Confederate 
>               ironclad Tennessee, which surrendered after being badly damaged.

	Also had turret problems, and according to Beach only fired 6 shots
	during the battle, but one of the 15" rounds fired at full charge
	nearly penetrated the casemate of the "Tennessee". 

>USS Chickasaw -With the Federal fleet at the Battle of Mobile Bay in 1864, she
>               and the three other monitors present (Manhattan, Tecumseh, and 
>               Winnebago) helped defend the fleet against the attacking 
>               ironclad CSS Tennessee.  The Chickasaw fired more than fifty
>               solid shots into the Confederate; rudder chains shot away, 
>               the battered, out-of-control Tennessee surrendered.

	Spent the battle following the "Tennessee" around and firing at her
	rudder, forcing her eventual surrender, but this task was suitable
	for an unarmored vessel!

	Overall, the monitors performed poorly at Mobile Bay, and had they
	been absent, Farragut would have defeated the "Tennessee" (a far
	better vessel than the "Virginia") with wooden ships only.
31.17The Official Spelling...NEMAIL::RASKOBMike Raskob at OFOMon Jun 29 1992 12:3813
    RE .5:
    
    According to a footnote in _The Civil War At Sea_, by Virgil Jones, the
    spelling controversy over the name of the U.S. steam frigate scuttled
    at Norfolk Navy Yard has been around for quite awhile.  However,
    according to U.S. Navy records, the "Merrimac" was a side-wheel steamer
    commissioned in 1864; the -> correct <- spelling of the vessel that was
    raised by the Confederates and turned into the C.S.S. Virginia was
    "Merrimack".
    
    (And now that _that_ vital historical issue is settled... :^} )
    
    MikeR